Only a hagiocracy could provide them a safer border in the region, especially in the face of the perceived threat. |
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When your army has crossed the border, you should burn your boats and bridges, in order to make it clear to everybody that you have no hankering after home. |
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The border police searched the car for drugs and other contraband. |
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During recess an inviolable border separated the townies at the northern end of our play area from the barnies at the southern. |
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The Anahi Mine located near the Brazilian border produces amethyst, citrina and Bolivianite. |
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We need boots on the ground to make the border a real barrier. Ten thousand new Border Patrol agents have been authorized by Congress. |
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The diplomat accused the other nation's leader of brinkmanship for refusing to redeploy the troops along their nations' shared border. |
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But trying to stop all the nation's meth chefs makes as much sense as building a wall along the Mexican border. |
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Although not a direct cause, the border skirmish was certainly a collateral incitement for the war. |
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It was the killing of Cupcake, a border collie mix, in a conibear trap last winter that first spurred the anti-trapping campaign here. |
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Liechtenstein has no border check at the Balzers heliport, so helicopters must go inside Schengen only. |
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The French armies were not far off, and there were alarums and excursions all along the border. |
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Thailand has built an antismuggler and antiterrorist fence along the Malaysian border. |
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Unlike most other borders in the EU, the Irish border is not officially marked by either government. |
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This can make identifying the border difficult for those unfamiliar with landmarks known to locals as the crossing point. |
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On larger roads, the approximate location of the border can be determined by signs reminding the driver of the change in units. |
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In April 1923, just four months after independence, the Irish Free State established customs barriers on the border. |
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However, it remained unclear where the border was between the UK and Ireland in Lough Foyle. |
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We cannot bring a cable into Lough Foyle, because the border line under the sea there is actually disputed. |
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Lough Foyle is a disputed border region, and, as I said, we cannot put submarine cables near disputed border regions. |
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Very little is known about them other than they posed a constant military threat to the Roman border. |
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In 1341 he led a raid into England, forcing Edward III to lead an army north to reinforce the border. |
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Most of the Scottish planters came from southwest Scotland, but many also came from the unstable regions along the border with England. |
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Eventually this line became the border between Malaysia and Indonesia in the Straits. |
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Austria later signed the Treaty of Campo Formio, ceding the Austrian Netherlands to France and recognizing the French border at the Rhine. |
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Of these, 108,000 troops were available for field operations while the other 29,000 watched the Swiss border and held the Rhine fortresses. |
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In contrast to this, a section of Poland's eastern border now comprises the external EU border with Belarus, Russia and Ukraine. |
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The highest part of the Carpathians is the Tatra Mountains, along Poland's southern border. |
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The coldest region of Poland is in the northeast in the Podlaskie Voivodeship near the border of Belarus and Lithuania. |
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India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands share a maritime border with Thailand and Indonesia. |
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Small mobile training camps were established along the border to train recruits in guerrilla warfare. |
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In retaliation for the strike, Pakistan closed the Torkham ground border crossing to NATO supply convoys for an unspecified period. |
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After the Torkham border closing, Pakistani Taliban attacked NATO convoys, killing several drivers and destroying around 100 tankers. |
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The English section of the Irish Sea coast ends at the border with Scotland in the Solway Firth. |
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This section includes all rivers entering the Irish Sea from England between the Scottish border and the Welsh border. |
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All rivers entering the North Sea from Redcar north to the Scottish border. |
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The southernmost counties of Scotland, nearest the border with England, are also known as the Borders. |
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Much of the border with England roughly follows the line of the ancient earthwork known as Offa's Dyke. |
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Areas close to the border with Cheshire can have Scouse accents of English, and along the coast Manchester accents are common. |
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In response, Spain completely closed the border with Gibraltar and severed all communication links. |
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The border with Spain was partially reopened in 1982 and fully reopened in 1985 before Spain's accession to the European Community. |
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Motorists and pedestrians crossing the border with Spain are occasionally subjected to very long delays. |
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The place of molybdomancy is also to be located in the uncertain border area between spontaneous and solicited projection. |
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Losses in Dublin and urban areas were balanced by gains in areas such as Limerick, Wicklow, Cork, Tipperary and Kilkenny and the border counties. |
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The divergent administration of the NHS between England and Scotland has created problems for patients who live close to the border. |
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However, there has been no agreement about the reimbursement of hospital charges for patients who cross the border for hospital treatment. |
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Scotland retained a fundamentally different legal system from that south of the border, but the Union exerted English influence upon Scots law. |
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They lost eight seats in Belfast and County Antrim, where the issue of the border had far less resonance. |
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Ireland and the United Kingdom also do not participate in the Schengen Agreement, which eliminates internal EU border checks. |
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Its sole land border is with Saudi Arabia to the south, with the rest of its territory surrounded by the Persian Gulf. |
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On 29 August 1756, he led Prussian troops across the border of Saxony, one of the small German states in league with Austria. |
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Together with British special forces, Norwegian special forces were the first to cross over the border into Kosovo. |
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Three American soldiers riding a Humvee in a routine patrol were captured by Yugoslav Special Forces across the Macedonian border. |
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That year, 1871, had marked a change which had been gradually coming in the lives of the peace-loving Mormons of the border. |
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Some of the dolmens and cromlechs are burial sites serving as well as border markers. |
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The western states moved to link their economies together, providing the basis for the EU and increasing cross border trade. |
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The son of a postman, MacDiarmid was born in the Scottish border town of Langholm, Dumfriesshire. |
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As the city lay only a few miles from the Russian border, there was a risk of getting stranded in a battle zone. |
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The family lived at 40 Stansfield Road, near the border of the south London areas of Brixton and Stockwell. |
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The red saltire of St Patrick is offset such that it does not relegate the white saltire of St Andrew to a mere border. |
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As a result, the border between Svalbard and the rest of Norway is largely treated like any other external Schengen border. |
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They do not have border controls with the Schengen countries that surround them, but they are not officially part of Schengen. |
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San Marino has an open border with Italy, although some random checks are made by Guardia di Finanza and San Marino's Guardia di Rocca. |
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In response to the European migrant crisis, several countries set up enhanced border controls. |
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Recent internal border controls according to the information that the member states have provided to the European Commission. |
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In response, both France and Germany threatened to impose border checks, not wanting the Tunisian refugees to enter their territory. |
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Such border controls appear to be an attempt to prevent disorder from making the crisis worse. |
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Germany signals the border controls are only temporary, and only to support an orderly flow of migration into the area. |
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Other countries, including Austria, Denmark, Slovenia, Hungary, Sweden and Norway have set up border controls in response to the crisis. |
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In 'exceptional' and 'unforeseen' circumstances where waiting times become excessive, external border checks can be relaxed on a temporary basis. |
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Similarly, long waiting times were reported at external border crossing points in France and Spain. |
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Finland, Hungary and Italy also issued notifications suspending systematic checks at some external border crossing points. |
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External border controls are located at roads crossing a border, at airports, at seaports and on board trains. |
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Usually, there is no fence along the land border, but there are exceptions like the Ceuta border fence, and some places at the eastern border. |
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Permits are issued with a validity period of between one and five years and allow for a stay in the border area of up to three months. |
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There is also a similar system for local border traffic permits between Spain and Morocco regarding Ceuta and Melilla. |
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A border checkpoint is a place, generally between two countries, where travelers or goods are inspected. |
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Since Liechtenstein joined the Schengen Area in 2011, this border station is for customs formality only. |
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Governments may forbid unauthorized entry or exit to border zones and restrict property ownership in the area. |
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The zones function as buffer zones specifically monitored by border patrols in order to prevent illegal entry or exit. |
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Between hostile states, the border zone can be heavily militarized with mine fields, barbed wire and watchtowers. |
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In some nations, movement inside a border zone without a license is an offence and will result in arrest. |
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Common types of buffer zones are demilitarized zones, border zones and certain restrictive easement zones and green belts. |
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The Scottish Marches is a term for the border regions on both sides of the border between England and Scotland. |
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His family, Mortimer Lords of Wigmore, had been border lords and leaders of defenders of Welsh marches for centuries. |
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By guarding the border, rather than conquering or colonizing Ezo, the Matsumae, in essence, made the majority of the island an Ainu reservation. |
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On the morning of 18 December 2011, the final contingent of US troops to be withdrawn ceremonially exited over the border to Kuwait. |
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In October 2011, the Turkish parliament renewed a law that gives Turkish forces the ability to pursue rebels over the border in Iraq. |
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Specialized government agencies are usually created to perform border controls. |
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The degree of strictness of border controls depends on the country and the border concerned. |
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Sometimes border controls exist on internal borders within a sovereign state. |
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All persons need to present their passports or other types of travel documents to cross the border. |
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Another example is the Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak, each having separate border controls from the rest of Malaysia. |
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A visitor may also be required to undergo and pass security or health checks upon arrival at the border. |
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Quarantine can be applied to humans, but also to animals of various kinds, and both as part of border control as well as within a country. |
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The aircraft were flown to the border, landed, and then at night towed on their wheels over the border by tractors or horses. |
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This also applies for illegally passing a border oneself, for illegal immigration or illegal emigration. |
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A border barrier is a separation barrier that runs along an international border. |
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Such barriers are typically constructed for border control purposes such as curbing illegal immigration, human trafficking and smuggling. |
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The border crossing is equipped with 54 counters for travelers and 8 for vehicular traffic. |
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Opened in 1999, Macau's Lotus Bridge supplemented what has been the only border crossing into mainland China through Border Gate. |
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China, in October 2006, is also building a security barrier along its border with North Korea to prevent illegal immigrants. |
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South Korea has constructed a border barrier between its territory and North Korea to obstruct any southward movement by the army of North Korea. |
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Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has subsequently offered to mine the border as well. |
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Also, a security barrier is on the border of Russia with Norway, Finland, China, Mongolia, and North Korea. |
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In 1999 Uzbekistan began constructing a barbed wire fence to secure its border with Kyrgyzstan. |
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It is to be constructed within days with the aim of the restoring order at the border. |
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In August 2015, Estonia announced a plan to build a barrier on its border with Russia. |
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The Calais border barrier built jointly by Britain and France on French soil surrounds the port and Channel Tunnel entrance at Calais. |
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In 2016 Norway constructed a barrier along a short part of its border with Russia, near the only official border crossing. |
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Slovenia began erecting a border barrier along its border with Croatia in 2015 to control illegal migration into the Schengen Area. |
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The US Government began to construct fortifications just south of the border at Rouses Point on Lake Champlain. |
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After the Pig War in 1859, arbitration in 1872 established the border between the Gulf Islands and the San Juan Islands. |
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This survey focused on the border from the Lake of the Woods to the summit of the Rocky Mountains. |
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Lawrence River and Great Lakes, in accordance with modern surveying techniques, and thus accomplished several changes to the border. |
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The border also runs through the middle of the Akwesasne Nation and even divides some buildings found in communities in Vermont and Quebec. |
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All persons crossing the border are required to report to the respective customs and immigration agencies in each country. |
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Instead, passengers must clear customs at a stop located at the actual border. |
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Lawrence River has a border control point on the island, but no specific location on the Canadian side. |
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The runway is entirely within North Dakota, but a ramp extends across the border to allow aircraft to access Canadian customs. |
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The Haskell Free Library and Opera House straddles the border in Derby Line, Vermont, and Stanstead, Quebec. |
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Surfers Paradise is just over the border in Queensland, and I was eager to dip a toe into that interesting and erratic state. |
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The emperor sent an evasive reply and, upon crossing the border, made sure that the echage marched on his right. |
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In the face of enfeebled, self-harming opposition on both sides of the border he has performed brilliantly. |
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A hard border is a real possibility, and a frictionless border is almost an oxymoron. |
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I went through a lengthy immigration process before I was allowed across the border. |
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For the purposes of border control, airports and seaports are also classed as borders. |
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Most countries have some form of border control to regulate or limit the movement of people, animals, and goods into and out of the country. |
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Moving goods across a border often requires the payment of excise tax, often collected by customs officials. |
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A relict border is a former boundary, which may no longer be a legal boundary at all. |
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Wherever two jurisdictions come into contact, special economic opportunities arise for border trade. |
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The Wagah border crossing between India and Pakistan along the Radcliffe Line. |
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The bridge over the Anarjohka in Karigasniemi, on the border of Finland with Norway. |
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The first border between Wales and England was zonal, apart from around the River Wye, which was the first accepted boundary. |
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The Act of Union of 1536 formed a linear border stretching from the mouth of the Dee to the mouth of the Wye. |
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It was never defined as a political border and the names were more or less descriptive. |
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The arrival of the nomadic Huns along the Black Sea corridor in AD 375 further accelerated the Goth's exodus across the Roman border. |
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Frontex is an agency of the EU established to manage the cooperation between national border guards securing its external borders. |
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All these routes connect to the M25, which runs near to and occasionally through the region's border with Greater London. |
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In Cumbria the M6 runs all the way down the east of the county connecting the very north of England to the Lancashire border. |
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It forms part of the border between Germany and Denmark and marks north border of Angeln. |
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The Guadiana bends southwards and forms the border between Spain and Portugal in the last stretch of its course. |
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Boys, up until the festival of Liberalia, wore the toga praetexta, which was a toga with a crimson or purple border. |
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Several colonies were placed in new provinces or on the border of the Empire to secure Roman holdings as quickly as possible. |
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It is more likely that the border between Roman and Iron Age Britain was less direct and more mutable during this period however. |
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When this word was given, the troops on standby crossed the border into Iraq. |
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The Silures of southeast Wales caused considerable problems to Ostorius and fiercely defended the Welsh border country. |
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However, border troops were usually very capable of handling enemies before they could penetrate far into the Roman hinterland. |
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His list of sexual contacts was quite long, and included ladies from some of the ritzier establishments of ill repute across the border. |
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In 122, they fortified the northern border with Hadrian's Wall, which spanned what is now Northern England. |
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Offa is credited with the construction of Offa's Dyke, marking the border between Wales and Mercia. |
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In Schleswig, they initiated the large fortification of Danevirke to mark the southern border of their realm. |
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William's western border was thus secured, but his border with Brittany remained insecure. |
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In 1164 Henry intervened to seize lands along the border of Brittany and Normandy, and in 1166 invaded Brittany to punish the local barons. |
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Further, Eleanor championed the match, as Navarre bordered Aquitaine, thereby securing the southern border of her ancestral lands. |
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He ingratiated himself with the Kurdish bloc when he stood up to aggressive Turkish rhetoric about the Kurdish border in May. |
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By 15 or 16 August, Henry and his men had crossed the English border, making for the town of Shrewsbury. |
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In 1525, Henry sent Mary to the border of Wales to preside, presumably in name only, over the Council of Wales and the Marches. |
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In 1865, the United States stationed a large combat Army near the Mexican border as a warning sign. |
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In the spring of 1639, King Charles I accompanied his forces to the Scottish border to end the rebellion known as the Bishops' War. |
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With their retreat route cut off, the FAC kadogo began defecting in droves, many fleeing across the border into Zambia. |
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The situation reached a general crisis in late August as German troops continued to mobilise against the Polish border. |
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By contrast, the Germans were steadily making preparations for an attack on the Soviet Union, massing forces on the Soviet border. |
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Northern Ireland shares a border to the south and west with the Republic of Ireland. |
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Many sister cities share a water boundary which quite often serves as a border of both cities and counties. |
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The northern part of Gloucestershire, near Chipping Campden, is as close to the Scottish border as it is to the tip of Cornwall. |
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Also on this day, two small areas were ceded from Surrey and Buckinghamshire to Berkshire, giving it a border with Greater London. |
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The boundary then turns south at Norton Folgate and becomes the border with Tower Hamlets. |
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The border is marked by signposts welcoming travellers both into Scotland and into England. |
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For a time a powerful local clan dominated a region on the border between England and Scotland. |
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Wendy Wood moved the border signs to the middle of the River Tweed as a protest. |
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Alfred's son Edward the Elder also secured homage from the Welsh, although sporadic border unrest continued. |
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Thus was created the border between Wales and England, a border which has survived until today. |
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Subsequently, the border between England and Wales has taken on increasing legal and political significance. |
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Knighton is the only town that can claim to be on the border as well as on Offa's Dyke. |
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The main road links over the border in the south are across the M4 Second Severn Crossing and the M48 Severn Bridge. |
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In general, placenames of Welsh origin are found to the west of the border, and those of English origin to the east. |
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For most purposes these are at either end of the tunnel, with the French border controls on the UK side of the tunnel and vice versa. |
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There is a need for full passport controls, since this is the border between the Schengen Area and the Common Travel Area. |
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The devastation was particularly bad on the Welsh side, from Laugharne in Carmarthenshire to above Chepstow on the English border. |
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Evidence of these nomadic tribes has been found in limestone caves located on the Nottinghamshire border. |
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In the north are the Cheviot Hills, a range of hills that mark the border between England and Scotland. |
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This stretches from the Cheviot Hills on the border with Scotland to the Peak District. |
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Britannia Inferior extended as far north as Hadrian's Wall, which was the northernmost border of the Roman Empire. |
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The wars also saw thousands of Scots settle south of the border, chiefly in the border counties and Yorkshire. |
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The Hilsea Lines are a series of defunct fortifications on the north coast of the island which border Portsbridge Creek and the mainland. |
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A robotic mower is contained by a border wire around the lawn that defines the area to be mowed. |
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Between junctions 22 and 25, the road is used as a border between the metropolitan boroughs of Calderdale and Kirklees. |
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The state shares its only land border with Northern Ireland, a part of the United Kingdom. |
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It is separated from Tajikistan by Afghanistan's narrow Wakhan Corridor in the north, and also shares a maritime border with Oman. |
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It shares a marine border with Oman, and is separated from Tajikistan by the cold, narrow Wakhan Corridor. |
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Since 1947, the unresolved territorial problems with Afghanistan saw border skirmishes which was kept mostly at the mountainous border. |
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In 1961, the military and intelligence community repelled the Afghan incursion in the Bajaur Agency near the Durand Line border. |
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Nepal, Bhutan and China are located near Bangladesh but do not share a border with it. |
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Alterations have been made on Shropshire's border with all neighbouring English counties over the centuries. |
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The names of several villages close to the border are of Welsh origin, such as Gobowen and Selattyn. |
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For Adrian, having the Eastern Roman Empire on its southern border was preferable to having to deal constantly with the troublesome Normans. |
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These were also unsuccessful and William was compelled to erect a series of border fortresses. |
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It did not cover the western part of Todmorden, where the ancient border between Lancashire and Yorkshire passes through the middle of the town. |
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Some high concentrations of castles occur in secure places, while some border regions had relatively few castles. |
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In Denmark and Sweden, the elves appear as beings distinct from the vetter, even though the border between them is diffuse. |
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Afterwards, however, the border area known as the Marches was set up and Norman influence increased steadily. |
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In Pakistan, the provinces of Sindh and Balochistan border the Arabian Sea. |
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An official Viez route or cider route connects Saarburg with the border to Luxembourg. |
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Cumbria's northern boundary stretches from the Solway Firth from the Solway Plain eastward along the border with Scotland to Northumberland. |
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By the early 1890s, the United Kingdom and Venezuela were in a border dispute involving British Guiana. |
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She eloped with Lawrence to her parents' home in Metz, a garrison town then in Germany near the disputed border with France. |
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In 1990, Bruno married his partner Laura at a small church in Hornchurch, an area of Greater London near the border with Essex. |
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The circuit straddles the Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire border, with the current main circuit entry on the Buckinghamshire side. |
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The flag in a white border occasionally seen on merchant ships was sometimes referred to as the Pilot Jack. |
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The Rio Grande forms the border between Texas and Mexico before turning due north and splitting New Mexico in half. |
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Facing both the Pacific Ocean and the Mexican border, the West has been shaped by a variety of ethnic groups. |
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A peace settlement for Northern Ireland, known as the Good Friday Agreement, was approved in 1998 in referendums north and south of the border. |
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Recognition of the Irish border was politically contentious and unpopular with Irish nationalists. |
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After complaints from the FAI, FIFA intervened and restricted players' eligibility based on the political border. |
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The border agreement was then lodged with the League of Nations on 8 February 1926, making it a matter of international law. |
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There are no longer any operational customs posts along either side of the border. |
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Except during a brief period in WWII it has never been necessary for Irish or British citizens to produce a passport to cross the border. |
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Both governments reaffirm that they have no plans to introduce fixed controls on either side of the Irish land border. |
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While UK is member of European union, every month, around 177000 lorries and 208000 vans, and 1850000 cars cross that border. |
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Additionally around 30 000 people cross the border daily because they don't live and work on the same side. |
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The Troubles in Northern Ireland required that attempts were made from the early 1970s until the late 1990s to enforce border controls. |
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In particular, the border area in south County Armagh was dominated by British Army surveillance posts. |
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While it still exists de jure, the border presents no impediments to traffic in either direction. |
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It is estimated that there are 300 major and minor crossings along the 310 mile border. |
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Believe me, I've walked the border of cuckooness many a time. |
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The sentry didn't answer. Taking a closer look at him I realised he wasn't a real sentry but a cut-out sentry, guarding not a real but a cut-out border. |
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He had seen many people die in accidental shootings or, as happened on border duty, someone went bosbefok and let loose with a machine-gun, screaming at an imaginary enemy. |
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They then pushed about 20,000 troops across the River Cholok border. |
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The Herdings line then runs on reserved track, and the Halfway line crosses the county border into Derbyshire and out again on reserved lines in the countryside. |
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Gruffudd pushed into Saxon England, burning the city of Hereford, overwhelming border patrols, and proving the English entirely inadequate to respond to Welsh invasions. |
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Victor Adler was born in a small Moravian town on the Galician border. |
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In cases of a disputed or unclear border, erecting a barrier can serve as a de facto unilateral consolidation of a territorial claim that can supersede formal delimitation. |
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When Manzanas arrived home from work, the assailant gunned him down from ambush with a volley of pistol shots and escaped across the nearby border to France. |
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Straddling the border between England and Scotland are the Cheviot Hills. |
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Other borders are partially or fully controlled, and may be crossed legally only at designated border checkpoints and border zones may be controlled. |
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A difference has also been established in academic scholarship between border and frontier, the latter denoting a state of mind rather than state boundaries. |
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All travellers arriving from outside the Schengen Area using their own air plane or boat, have to go directly to an airport or seaport having a border control. |
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Exit stamp for road travel, issued at Korczowa border crossing. |
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Walpole Island, named for Sir Robert Walpole, comprises an island and an Indian reserve in southwestern Ontario, Canada, on the border between Ontario and Michigan. |
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Moving goods, animals, or people illegally across a border, without declaring them or seeking permission, or deliberately evading official inspection, constitutes smuggling. |
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In places where smuggling, migration, and infiltration are a problem, many countries fortify borders with fences and barriers, and institute formal border control procedures. |
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In addition, a border may be a de facto military ceasefire line. |
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The Welsh inhabitants of Archenfield thereafter retained their privileged position, living in a shadowy border land that was not really part of England nor Wales. |
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The Wye Valley is located in the river's valleys south of Hereford, while the Malvern Hills are in the east of the county, along its border with Worcestershire. |
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The French prepared an offensive on multiple fronts, with two armies in Flanders under Pichegru and Moreau, and Jourdan attacking from the German border. |
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Attempted border entries have fallen since the barrier was constructed. |
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The metal strip within the building of the Eurode Business Centre marks the border between the Netherlands and Germany, in Kerkrade and Herzogenrath. |
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The winding border between Pakistan and India is lit by security lights. |
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William I of England established a series of lordships, allocated to his most powerful warriors along the Welsh border, the boundaries fixed only to the east. |
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It had responsibility for the whole of England and Wales but with specifically designated border arrangements with Scotland covering the catchment of the River Tweed. |
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For example, in the People's Republic of China, there are border controls at the borders among the mainland and the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau. |
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To prevent similar German attacks in the future, France later built a massive series of fortifications along the German border known as the Maginot Line. |
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During the first years of the 20th century, the border between the two nations in Patagonia was established by the mediation of the British crown. |
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Applicants for a permit have to show that they have legitimate reasons to cross frequently an external land border under the local border traffic regime. |
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This lacuna has been addressed by the recently passed Directive on services in the internal market which aims to liberalise the cross border provision of services. |
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Botswana has responded that the fence is designed to keep out cattle, and to ensure that entrants have their shoes disinfected at legal border crossings. |
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This was an attempt to push the Axis forces off the key passes at the border, which gained some initial success, but the advanced position could not be held. |
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Its territories expanded and shrank, but it came to occupy the northern third of the island of Great Britain, sharing a land border to the south with the Kingdom of England. |
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For example, Hong Kong Permanent Identity Card and Home Return Permit are required for Hong Kong Permanent Residents who are Chinese citizens to cross the border. |
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They share an open border and both are part of the Common Travel Area. |
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This makes sense, since Baltistan shares a border with China. |
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By 500 the Etruscans expanded to border Celts in north Italy, and trade across the Alps began to overhaul trade with the Greeks, and the Rhone route declined. |
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He called for a United Nations peacekeeping force to be deployed and said that Irish Army field hospitals were being set up at the border in County Donegal near Derry. |
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In the north of Britain, ongoing border struggles across the defensive walls led to the establishment of buffer states, including the Votadini in Northumberland. |
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The Cave of Swimmers and the Cave of Beasts in southwest Egypt, near the border with Libya, in the mountainous Gilf Kebir region of the Sahara Desert. |
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The River Tees forms part of the border between North Yorkshire and County Durham and flows from upper Teesdale to Middlesbrough and Stockton and to the coast. |
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As for the Muslimized Malays, they live mainly in the sourthernmost changwads that border on Malaysia, although there are small communities of them in and near Bangkok. |
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Creswell Crags is an enclosed limestone gorge on the border between Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, England, near the villages of Creswell and Whitwell. |
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It became less Roman, the duties of border protection and territorial administration being more and more taken by foreign mercenaries officered by Romans. |
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Boys, up until the festival of Liberalia, wore the toga praetexta, which was a toga with a crimson or purple border, also worn by magistrates in office. |
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Looking into Austria from Liechtenstein, with a joint border station. |
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Ireland also hosted a round of the World Rally Championship in 2007 and 2009, with stages being held in the Republic and also across the border in Northern Ireland. |
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The Heineken Cup was launched in the summer of 1995 on the initiative of the then Five Nations Committee to provide a new level of professional cross border competition. |
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In 1909 the United States, United Kingdom and Canada signed and ratified a treaty confirming the original survey lines as the official and permanent international border. |
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The Scandinavian Mountains form much of the border with Sweden. |
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An identity document is inspected when one crosses the border. |
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In 1990 the Agreement was supplemented by the Schengen Convention, which proposed the abolition of internal border controls and a common visa policy. |
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In Normandy some of the border barons rose up and, although the majority of the duchy remained openly loyal, there appears to have been a wider undercurrent of discontent. |
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The arms of Oriel College, Oxford alludes to the institution's regal foundation by using the Royal Arms of England with a silver border added for difference. |
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As part of this treaty, the border town of Leticia and its surrounding area was ceded from Peru to Colombia, giving Colombia access to the Amazon River. |
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The English king responded by laying siege to the important border town of Berwick and defeated a large relieving army at the Battle of Halidon Hill. |
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In Scotland, the English regime change prompted border raids that were countered by an invasion in 1402 and the defeat of a Scottish army at the Battle of Homildon Hill. |
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Many of the surviving Lancastrian nobles switched allegiance to King Edward, and those who did not were driven back to the northern border areas and a few castles in Wales. |
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While not signing the Schengen Treaty, Ireland has always looked more favourably on joining but has not done so to maintain the CTA and its open border with Northern Ireland. |
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It incorporates Lewis in the north and Harris in the south, both of which are frequently referred to as individual islands, although they are joined by a land border. |
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Mary escaped from Loch Leven in 1568 but after another defeat fled across the border into England, where she had once been assured of support from Elizabeth. |
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Crossing the border at Shenzhen River on 8 December, the Battle of Hong Kong lasted for 18 days when British and Canadian forces held onto Hong Kong Island. |
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The small port of Gravelines was then part of Flanders in the Spanish Netherlands, close to the border with France and the closest Spanish territory to England. |
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When the Communist Party eventually took full control of mainland China in 1949, even more skilled migrants fled across the open border for fear of persecution. |
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Eventually, fearing for his own safety and that of his family, he decided to flee Paris to the Austrian border, having been assured of the loyalty of the border garrisons. |
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Hong Kong maintains an international border with PR China across 5 border control stations by land, 3 entry and exit points by sea and the International Airport. |
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In some cases countries can introduce controls that functions as border controls but aren't border controls legally and don't need to be performed by government agencies. |
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On 1 September 1939, Germany invaded Poland under the false pretext that the Poles had carried out a series of sabotage operations against German targets near the border. |
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During World War I, European governments introduced border passport requirements for security reasons, and to control the emigration of people with useful skills. |
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While most of the German army was engaged in Poland, a much smaller German force manned the Siegfried Line, their fortified defensive line along the French border. |
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The French forces were to effectively gain control over the area between the French border and the German lines and were to probe the German defences. |
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Since the Wehrmacht was occupied in the attack on Poland, the French soldiers enjoyed a decisive numerical advantage along their border with Germany. |
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The modern border between Wales and England was largely defined by the Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542, based on the boundaries of medieval Marcher lordships. |
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The Irish border is considered one of the most atypical of international boundaries, in terms of its historical origins, geographical context, and administrative regime. |
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